Prime Minister David Cameron was there a few weeks ago - and this week it was Labour Party leader Ed Miliband’s turn to pay a visit to the Gurdwara Sahib in Warwick where he met members of the town’s Sikh community on Wednesday.

During the 45-minute visit Mr Miliband heard Sikh hymns and served food to members of the congregation and the temple’s committee before speaking to various individuals.

We just can’t allow tax avoidance to take place|

Ed Miliband

Jagtar Singh Gill, who was a member of the Temple’s committee when it opened in 2009 and was representing the Sikh Council UK as its administrative secretary, said he thanked Mr Miliband for the Labour Party’s role in having the law passed to allow Sikh’s to wear turbans in all workplaces.

Mr Gill said: “For Ed to visit the temple is good news for Sikhs in Leamington and Warwick. It is a landmark and a place where equality is one of the key principles.”

The Labour leader had made the visit after he had delivered a speech at Warwick University in which he made a pledge to abolish the 200-year-old ‘non-dom tax’ if his party wins the General Election next month.

The rule means that people with non-domicile status - those who live and work in Britain but who can show they regard a foreign country as their real home - do not have to pay tax on any overseas income, only that in the UK.

This affects around £116,000 people in the UK.

In the speech Mr Miliband said: “In a world of tough, difficult, choices we just can’t allow tax avoidance to take place.

“It all comes back to the claim that we are powerless in the face of the richest and most powerful - that it may not be fair to have a rule for them and another for everybody else but that’s just how it is.

“I just don’t buy it, because it just isn’t true, because governments can act.”

But this latest policy has been ridiculed by the Conservatives who, on the morning of the visit, highlighted a video of Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls saying that abolishing the tax could actually cost the country money.